RAÚL TORRESExecutive Director, Provías Nacional
Hanoi, June 14, 2011
PERÚMinistry of
Transport and
Communications
Viceministry
of TransportProvias Nacional
PERÚ:
PPPs and CREMA contracts on National Roads
2
PERÚ
SurfaceExtension: 1.285.215,60 km2, with the jungle beingthe biggest area and also the least accessible.
WeatherVaries from tropical in the jungle to frigid in the highlands.Average temperature in the coast is 20°c, moderate weather.In the highlands, temperature oscilates between -7°c and 21°c.The jungle is a region extremely warm and humid.
Natural ResourcesFishing and mining are the principal resources.
GDP and Population2009: US$ 4353 per capita. 29 132 013 habitantsGDP growth rate for 2010: 8%
Geographic ChallengesIt´s difficult to work in the highlands: steep surface, forming geology, can’t interfere with mining, etc.
4
Various Physical Challanges
ORGANIZATION: Provías Nacional
Project of the Ministry of Transport and Communications in charge of transport infrastructureand national highways network projects.
Objectives: construction, rehabilitation, improvement, conservation and maintenance of the national highwayinfrastructure.
Organizational Structure:
Executive Direction
Work Contracts
Especial Projects Office
Technical Office of Concessions
Legal Themes OfficeGenaral
Administración
Internal Control Office
Procurador Ad Hoc
Regional Offices
Programming, Evaluation and Information Office
PROVIAS NACIONAL ORGANIZATION CHART
Viceministy of Transport
Conservation Office l
Operations OfficeStudies Office
Ministry of Transportand Communications
The Executive Office is responsible of general administration.
The Institutional Control Office is responsible of programming, conducting, coordinating, executing and evaluating all the activities.
The Tecnical Office of Concessions is responsible of technical matters of concessioned roads.
The Office of Special Projects is responsible of conducting new projects and processes that will later be incorporated in routine operations.
The Office of Programming, Evaluation and Information is responsible of coordinating and conduction general programming activities.
The Legal Office is responsible of advising on matters of legal nature.
The Administration Office is responsible of human, finantial and material resources.
The Office of Studies is responsible of evaluating investment and maintenance projects.
The Office of Investment is responsible of administration of investment contracts
The Office of Roads Conservation is responsible of interventions and road maintenance contracts, and the solution of road emergencies.
The Office of Operations is responsible of the administration of tolls stations.
The Zonal Offices (16) collaborate on every intervention in a given area, coordinating with the above offices.
1) There are variouos global and sectoral plans that define the context of road and transport development.
2) Multi-annual Public Investment Plan 2011– 2013Contains a 3-year investment plan for the nationalnetwork, in accordance with the instructions from theMinistry of Finance.
3) Annual Plan 2011. In accordance with the MTC annualbudget.
DEVELOPMENT PLANS
Vicious cycle Virtuos cycle
abandonment
construction destruction
reconstruction
Routine maintenance
Construction-improvement
Periodic maintenance
Continual Road Development
ROAD POLICY
From vicious cycle to virtuos cycle
Ministerial Act Nº 817-2006-MTC/9: National Policy for the Transport Sector
1. NEW NATIONAL POLICY BASIS OF THE TRANSPORT SECTOR
Integral view of services and transport infrastructure.
Integrated management system user focused to improve efficiency, safety and quality.
Modern regulatory framework and institutional organization.
Adequate financing for the sustainability of the system.
Priority and effective infrastructure conservation and their development in accordance with demand and accessibility.
Technological development and staff competences.
NATIONAL TRANSPORT SECTOR POLICY
2. NATIONAL POLICY GUIDELINES IN THE TRANSPORT SECT OR
Infrastructure priority conservation. Orderly development of transport infrastructure.
Promoting of the development, security and quality of transport services and logistics related.
Promoting private sector participation in the provision of transport services and infrastructure.
Support to the national and international integration.
Contribution to the consolidation of the country's decentralization process.
Strengthening the socio-environmental management in the transport sector.
NATIONAL TRANSPORT SECTOR POLICY
14
National System of Roads
Three network categories: National, State and Local
Road network Paved Not pavedAdditional
2/Existing
Under project
Total
National 12.445 11.151 23.596 2.421 26.017 State 1.500 21.500 23.000 6.000 29.000 Local 700 37.500 40.800 79.000 2.000 81.000 1/ Updated to year 2010 125.596 10.421 136.017 2/ Additional local roads:
i) Identified for inclusion 18.500
ii) In process of identification 22.300
40.800
National Road Network (responsibility of the National
Government, through Provías Nacional)
Road Infrastructure Competencies
DEPARTAMENTAL ROAD NETWORK
(responsibility of Regional Governments)
Studies, Operations, Periodic Maintenance and Routi ne Maintenance
Law of Decentralization Guidelines (Nº 27783), 20.07 .2002:
7.2 National Goverment has jurisdiction in the entire territory of the Republic,Regional and Local Governments have it on their respective administrativearea.
LOCAL ROAD NETWORK(responsibility of Local
Governments)
16
The National Road Network
Basic Road Inventory: length by surface typePeruvian road classification: D.S. N°044-2008-MTC
Road axes Divisions of the road axes
Total Length and type of road surfaceura (Km)
Length (Km) Asphalted Affirmed No affirmed Trail roadRVN
ExistingIn Project
PE-1 Longitudinal axes of the Coast 2.640,683 2.640,683 2.640,683
PE-3 Longitudinal axes of the Mountain 3.463,412 1.998,639 1.087,028 6,147 212,728 3.304,542 158,870
PE-5 Longitudinal axes of the Jungle 2.676,500 1.028,662 156,245 314,881 237,831 1.737,619 938,881
Variants and Branches 4.449,606 1.422,351 2.291,798 256,257 122,742 4.093,148 356,458
Transversal Axes 12.786,867 5.354,592 5.066,185 1.057,000 342,066 11.819,843 967,024Overall Total 26.017,068 12.444,927 8.601,256 1.634,285 915,367 23.595,835 2.421,233
Source: Measurement study of the RVN, December 2010
17
BRIDGES
Source: Conservation Management Unit – Provias Nacio nal
Itervention Period 2006 - 2011
Constructed 41
Modular 23
Routine Maintenance 33
Periodic Maintenence 8
Concession 294
TOTAL 399
Bidges intervened = 399
Bridges of the National Road Network = 2,000
0
17
Longitudinal Axes (Concession and no Concession)
IIRSA Concession Axes
Navigable rivers
Great National Road Axes
The Road Development Strategyfocuses on the consolidation ofgreat road axes.
19
No Asfaltado
Road surface ang management type of the RVN 1990-2012P (Km.)
Souces:
From 1990 to 2007: INEI. By 2008-2009: DS 044-2008-MTC-DGCF. By 2010: Study of Basic Road Inventory RVN or measurement study of the national routes: DGCF-MTC
2011 and2012 projections: Estimates of PVN / OPEI: according interventions in the RVN
KILOMETERSClassify DS-009-1995 DS-034 DS-044-2008
Years 1990 1995 2000 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011P 2012P
PAVED 5.740 6.477 8.523 8.731 8.911 11.178 11.370 11.500 12.445 12.663 13.040AFFIRMED 6.958 6.602 6.762 5.901 6.721 7.537 7.601 8.069 8.601 8.383 8.006NO AFFIRMED 2.552 2.773 1.502 1.899 1.899 3.089 2.896 2.896 1.634 1.634 1.634TRAIL ROAD 442 667 267 326 326 2.035 2.035 2.035 915 915 915
TOTAL 15.692 16.519 17.053 16.857 17.857 23.838 23.903 24.500 23.596 23.596 23.596
RVN DEVELOPMENTS BY TYPE OF ADMINISTRATION: 1990 - 2 012PKILOMETERS
Clasificador DS-009-1995 DS-034 DS-044-2008
Años 1990 1995 2000 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011P 2012P
No concessioned 15.692 16.414 16.948 14.388 15.388 19.807 19.871 19.514 18.234 18.234 18.234Concessioned 105 105 2.469 2.469 4.031 4.031 4.986 5.362 5.362 5.362
TOTAL 15.692 16.519 17.053 16.857 17.857 23.838 23.903 24.500 23.596 23.596 23.596
Souces: INEI, DGCF-MTC
RVN developments by type of road surface: 1990-2012 P
2020
INTERVENTIONS IN THE NATIONAL ROAD NETWORK EJECUTED 2001 - 2010 AND PROJECTED 2011
PROJEC.2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011
IN KILOMETERSNOT CONCESSIONED 3.767 8.809 9.913 9.943 10.327 10.399 10.685 11.124 12.352 13.584 13.350
Rehabilitation, upgrading and construction 235 274 158 363 253 290 219 249 455 354 538
Conservation and maintenance1/ 3.532 8.535 9.755 9.580 10.074 10.109 10.466 10.875 11.897 13.230 12.811
RVN routine paved (*) 3.532 8.400 8.542 8.026 8.218 7.532 7.615 6.078 5.838 1.414 70
RVN routine unpaved 1.000 866 1.449 2.522 2.633 2.052 2.297 873 1.092
RVN periodical paved 135 213 688 407 55 219 407 530 585 278
By Level of services - OPE 4/ 2.338 3.232 7.563 7.832
By level of services - UGC 4/ 2.795 3.539
CONCESSIONED 105 105 287 287 287 2.369 4.031 4.031 4.511 4.511 4.604
Rehabilitation, upgrading and construction - - - - - 97 296 534 1.046 1.595 218
Cofinanced 97 281 515 868 1.571 218
Self-financing 2/ 14 19 179 25
Conservation and maintenance 3/ 105 105 287 287 287 2.272 3.736 3.497 3.465 2.916 4.386
Cofinanced 105 105 287 287 287 1.867 3.346 3.112 2.883 2.180 3.626
Self-financing 404 390 385 582 736 761
RVN TOTAL INTERVENTION 3.871 8.914 10.200 10.230 10.614 12.767 14.716 15.155 16.863 18.095 17.954
RVN EXISTNG LENGTH 17.092 17.158 16.857 16.857 16.857 17.857 23.838 23.903 24.500 23.596 23.596
COVERAGE 23 52 61 61 63 71 62 63 69 77 76
SPENDING IN US$ millions (**) 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011RVN NO CONCESSIONED 205 189 203 251 215 234 370 362 488 938 1.343
Rehabilitaton, improvement and construction 177 163 161 190 163 189 253 240 279 475 894
Conservation and maintenance 28 26 43 61 52 45 117 122 209 463 449RVN CONCESSIONED - - - - 0 33 63 165 661 852 671
Rehabilitation, improvement and construction - - - - - 11 28 100 558 767 570
Conservation y maintenance - - - - 0 23 34 66 103 86 101
TOTAL COST 205 189 203 251 215 267 433 528 1.149 1.790 2.014
Source: PROVIAS NACIONAL – OPEI / PFISICA / 201105271/ Routine maintenance periods can not be accumulated2/ OSITRAN – OGPP Information 3/ According to the concession contract must maintain concessioned highways4/ With financing until july 2011, to the end of 2011 have only 946.61 Km. and 1,122.86 km. financing for OPE and UGC respectively(*) In 2010, includes routine maintenance contracts prior to service level contracts with responsability of UGC.
(**) SIAF – fiendly consultation. Commitments for year 2006-2010 and PIM 2011, converted to U.S. Dollars at average annual exchange rate
INTERVENTIONSEXECUTED
�Interventionsmap road no concessioned
SITUATIONAL SUMMARY NRN
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TOTAL KM. % %
Existing National Road
Network [1]23 596 100
a) RVN Concessioned : 5 363 23
b) RVN No Concessionet : 18 233 77 100
Maintenance contracts with
level of service [2]: 11 371 62
With various interventions [3] 6 862 38
[1] With basis road inventory (Study of measurement - DGCF-MTC.Dic 2010[2] CCxNS Perú Projet: 7,832 Km.; Conservation Managemen Unit: 3,539 km.
[3] Includes: Rehabilitation and improvement works, pre-investment and investmen studies, routine maintenance an emergency interventions
23
DEVELOPING STATE OF THE RVN (Km.) 1/
1/ PVN/OPEI estimations: according to the criteria of Inventories 2005 (TNM) and 2006 (INOCSA) + RVN interventions in 2010 and project 2012
DEVELOPING STATE OF THE RVN 1990-2012PClassifier DS-009-1995 DS-034 DS-044-2008
Years 1990 1995 2000 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011P
GOOD 5.224 7.535 5.856 6.008 6.416 7.358 8.286 10.527 13.385REGULAR 6.905 7.549 4.328 4.198 4.612 7.878 7.253 7.578 8.488 6.893BAD 6.904 3.746 5.190 6.803 7.237 9.543 9.292 8.636 4.580 3.318
6.904
3.7465.1906.803 7.237
9.543 9.292 8.6364.580
3.3182.455
6.905
7.549 4.3284.198 4.612
7.878 7.253 7.578
8.4886.893
6.675
15.692 16.519 17.053 16.85717.857
23.838 23.903 24.500 23.596 23.596 23.596
0
4.000
8.000
12.000
16.000
20.000
24.000
28.000
1990 1995 2000 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011P 2012P
Km.
GODREGULAR
BAD
PERU: Financement, 2001-2010Millions of New Soles
Resources 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010POrdinary 247 255 236 232 270 538 1,139 1,334 2,484 4,458 Directly gathered 255 98 184 230 172 201 147 162 105 299 Off icial credit operations 216 312 267 378 267 96 23 0 789 274 Grants, transfers and concessions - - 20 15 1 39 45 48 83 92
TOTAL 718 665 707 856 709 874 1,355 1,543 3,460 5,122
718 665 707856
709874
1,3551,543
3,460
5,122
0
1000
2000
3000
4000
5000
6000
2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010P
Grants, transfers and concessions
Official credit operations
Directly gathered
Ordinary
RED VIAL NACIONAL
NO CONCESSIONS : 10,263.00 Km.
Unit Tolls : 33 UP
RED VIAL NACIONAL
CONCESSIONS : 5,042.09 Km.
Unit Tolls : 57 UP
TOLLS ALONG THE NRN
NRN INTERVENTIONS, NOT CONCESSED 2006-2011
EXECUTED PROYECTED2006
Ago-Dic2007 2008 2009 2010
2011Ene-Jul
2011Ago-Dic
(KILOMETERS)
NOT CONCESSED NRN 10,221 10,685 11,124 12,352 13,584 12,211 11,831
Rehabilitation, improvement and construction 138 219 249 455 354 321 218
Conservation and maintenance 1/ 10,082 10,466 10,875 11,897 13,230 11,891 11,613
Routine, paved NRN (*) 7,532 7,615 6,078 5,838 1,414 70 70
Routine, non-paved NRN 2,522 2,633 2,052 2,297 873 1,092 1,092
Periodic, paved 28 219 407 530 585 278 -
Road conservation by results - Peru Project - - 2,338 3,232 7,563 7,563 7,563
Road conservation by results - U.G.Conservación - - - - 2,795 2,888 2,888
INTERVENCIONES
1/ Routine maintenance periods can not be accumulated
2/ OSITRAN – OGPP information
3/ According with the concession contract must maintain concessioned highways
(*) In 2010, includes routine maintenance contracts prior to service level contracts with responsability of UGC.
Public – private associations
PPP for long term investment: Concesions.
Performance medium term contracts for maintenance
CREMA, Rehabilitation plus Maintenance contracts in the near future
EVOLUTION OF CONCESSION CONTRATCS
Have changed profoundfly through time.
We have gone from defining more income for the government as the principal tender condition (Ex. Lima Airport) to asking for the greather amount of investment (as in Paita Port) to demanding lower tariffs (as in Lima North Port), this is, from incomes for the government to lower tariffs for users, in a six year period.
In the case of roads, we have gone from asking the bigger investments in monetary terms for the principal road to more additional investments associated with the road, being the road principal investments mandatory.
The evolutin in roads contracts have been in the details of interventions, as commented later.
ROAD CONCESSIONS
On roads with big traffic values or of strategic importance.
Variable road lenght, from around 150 KM, as in Buenos Aires Canchaque to more than one thousand, as in IIRSA Sur.
We have autofinanced concessions to concesions with public incomes
Advance of asphalt in roads on concession
Techinical issues of long term concessions: definitions, as of routine and periodic maintenance; profundity of studies; interferences; relations with the population; articulation with otherroads; necessity of regional development plans.
Legal aspects of long term concessions: clarity of functions of concedent institution and other participants; contract amendments;
Financial themes on long term concessiones: average KM costsdependes of studies level; the financial eq sometimes sacrificeimportant investments, as security barriers, etc.
Road ConcessionsId Corredor
Longitud
(Km)
1 Red Vial N° 5, Tramo Ancón - Huacho - Pativ ilca 182,7
2 IIRSA Norte, Eje Multimodal Amazonas, Tramo Paita -
Yurimaguas
955,1
3 IIRSA Sur, Tramo 2 del Corredor Vial Interoceánico
Sur (Urcos - Inambari)
300,0
4 IIRSA Sur, Tramo 3 del Corredor Vial Interoceánico
Sur (Inambari - Iñapari)
403,2
5 IIRSA Sur, Tramo 4 del Corredor Vial Interoceánico
Sur (Azángaro - Inambari)
305,9
6 Red Vial N° 6, Tramo Puente Pucusana - Cerro Azul -
Ica
221,7
7 Tramo Empalme 1B - Buenos Aires - Canchaque
(Programa Costa Sierra)
78,1
8 IIRSA Sur, Tramo 1 del Corredor Vial Interoceánico
Sur (Marcona - Urcos)
757,6
9 IIRSA Sur, Tramo 5 del Corredor Vial Interoceánico
Sur (Matarani - Azángaro / Ilo - Juliaca)
827,1
10 Red Vial N° 4, Tramo Pativ ilca - Puerto Salav erry 356,2
11 Tramo Ov alo Chancay / Dv Variante Pasamay o -
Huaral - Acos
76,5
12 Tramo Nuev o Mocupe - Cay alti - Oy otun 46,8
13 Autopista El Sol (Trujillo - Chiclay o - Piura - Sullana) 475,0
14 IIRSA Centro, Tramo 2 (Puente Ricardo Palma - La
Oroy a – Huancay o y La Oroy a - Dv Cerro de Pasco)
370,0
Totales 5.355,9
Interventions in the RVN Concessioned 2006-2011
31
Construction, improvement and rehabilitation
TRAMO Suscrip. Long_km 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011PRed Vial Nº 5 (Carretera Ancón-Huacho-Pativilca) 15/ene/03 182.660 - 14.440 19.460 - - -
IIRSA NORTE, Eje Multimodal Amazonas Norte - (Piura - Olmos - Corral Quemado - Rioja - Tarapoto-Yurimaguas)
17/jun/05 955.100 57.000 37.000 243.311 154.101 265.815 -
IIRSA SUR Tramo 2 del Corredor Vial Interoceánico Sur (Urcos - Inambari)
04/ago/05 300.000 9.890 69.610 27.670 60.830 78.400 1.140
IIRSA SUR Tramo 3 del Corredor Vial Interoceánico Sur (Pte. Inambari - Iñapari)
04/ago/05 403.200 17.000 90.000 171.000 98.000 29.210 4.600
IIRSA SUR Tramo 4 del Corredor Vial Interoceánico Sur (Azángaro - Pte. Inambari)
04/ago/05 305.900 13.141 84.574 45.745 17.340 120.200 21.200
Red Vial Nº 6 (Carretera Puente Pucusana-Cerro Azul-Ica) 20/sep/05 221.695 - - - 178.520 24.730 -
Empalme 1B-Buenos Aires-Canchaque (Programa Costa Sierra)
09/feb/07 78.127 - - 6.200 70.740 - -
IIRSA SUR Tramo 1 del Corredor Vial Interoceánico Sur, Perú - Brasil (Marcona - Urcos)
23/oct/07 757.640 - - 20.860 325.990 390.650 9.640
IIRSA Tramo 5 del Corredor Vial Interoceánico Sur, Perú - Brasil (Matarani - Jualiaca - Azángaro / Ilo - Puno - Juliaca)
24/oct/07 827.110 - - - 140.860 686.240 57.890
Red Vial N° 4 (Pativilca - Chimbote - Trujillo) 18/feb/09 356.210 - - - - - -
Ovalo Chancay / Dv Variante pasamayo - Huaral - Acos 20/feb/09 76.500 - - - - - 76.500
Nuevo Mocupe -Cayalti -Oyotun 30/abr/09 46.797 - - - - - 46.800
Autopista El Sol (Trujillo - Sullana) 25/ago/09 474.990 - - - - - -
IIRSA CENTRO Tramo 2 (Pte. Ricardo Palma-La Oroya-Cerro de Pasco)
06/oct/10 377.350 - - - - - -
Concesiones 5,363 97 296 534 1,046 1,595 218
Maintenance and road development
Very limited till 2007. Budget only 200 million US dollars for yearNow 1,300 million US dollars for a yearThe maintenance system includes a toll network and weigthcontrol stationsIn the medium term it has to estabilize around 2,000 million a year, less than 2.5% of the road value. We use as benchmark5% a year, because we obtein the road value in 20 years, valuing one million US dollars each KM.The application of Medium Term Performance basedMaintenance Contracts (MPMC) has been very succesfulAt the start, 2007, only 25% of the national network in good and regular shape, now it is 85%.
ROAD CONSERVATION BY SERVICE LEVELS
New concept of Road Administration System. First stage: road maintenance for large economic corridors, emergencies and qualified road inventories. Achieved through mid-termcontracts, transferring to the contractor the responsibility of the roadcondition.Second stage: CREMA contracts, mixing rehabilitation and maintenanceactivities.The MPMC are applied to big economic corridors, between 300 to 400 KMThe five year period was selected to foster competition during thecontracting process, because longer periods demand increasingfinancial capacities to postorsThe tender reference value is defined using a estándar technology forthe periodic intervention that in contained in the contractNo important changes on the geometry of the road, emphasis ondrainage and security
The technology of reference for the tender value is: asphalt emulsion on a 15 centimeters of selected gravel on the road plus impermeabilization plus one inch of asphalt for transit comfortIs one of the so called Basic Pavements. The basic idea is that a road in good shape generates transit that is the principal variable that allows the engineering studies to reach higher technological needed levelsEach KM of Basic Pavement costs around 100 thousand US dollars versus 1 million of each KM of definitive interventions (normally with application of hot asphalt)That is the «Proyecto Perú» (Peruvian Project) strategyThe contractors have four basic responsabilities: To maintain permanently the good shape of the road, after the first six monthsThe risk is transferred to the contractor
After the first six months they do a periodic maintenance, the routine maintenance is mandatory since the start of the contract, they attend emergencies on the roads (floods, earth slides, etc.) and gather informations on the road use (counting vehicles, surveying origin and destiny in trips, etc.)They can use a different technology than the one used as reference for the tender value, as long as it is not more expensive, having opened an space for technology researchIn the andean worls the attention of emergencies are very frecuent and difficult, having changed the initial contracts to respond to this situation.
The idea of continouos road development
The centrality on the maintenance activityThe only activity that has the entire network as referenceRapid technical change and road use induces road development and not only conservationAny intervention can generate a road investment: emergency attention, routine maintenance, periodic maintenance, security, etc.Maintenance as the contracting of services versus investment as the contracting of works. The difference is profound in the peruvian legislation.The horizon is of convergence: The CREMA contracts.
Conservation for servicelevel
37
Fuente: Contratos de Conservación por Niveles de Servicio
UO Nº Corridor Location Length km
3,538.933
UGC 24 Limite Regional Dv. Bayovar y Via Evitamiento Chiclayo -Lambayeque - Mocce - Dv Olmos
Lambayeque 261,660
UGC 25 Puente Ricardo Palma-La Oroya- Huancayo-y jauja-Tarma
Lima, Junín 349,390
UGC 26 Dv. Bayovar - Bappo - Sechura - Piura - Dv. Bayovar Piura 253,000
UGC 27 Dv. Las Vegas – Tarma – La Merced - Satipo Junín 230,400
UGC 28 Dv. Paita-Sullana-Dv. Talara-Mancora-Aguas Verdes, Sullana-Macara y Límite Internacional Lado Peru eje Vial
No. 01
Tumbes, Piura 437,600
UGC 29 Guadalupe- Ica- Palpa- atico Ica, Arequipa 379,780UGC 30 Cusco Pisac-Urcos- La Raya- Urubamba Chincheros y
Yauri- San Genaro- Sicuani y Huarcapay- Huambutio-Pisac- Alfamayo-Quillibamba
Cusco 515,883
UGC 31 Puno - Desaguadero, Calapuja - La Raya e Ilave -Mazocruz
Puno 367,500
UGC 32 Atico – Dv.Quilca -La Reparticion, Dv.Matarani-Pte.Montalvo y Dv.Ilo-Pte.Camiara
Arequipa - Moquegua -Tacna
457,820
UGC 33 Ciudad de dios – cajamarca, chilete – contumaza y chicama - cascas
Cajamarca - La Libertad 285,900
11.371,273OPE 7.832,340UGC 3.538,933
CONSERVATION MANAGEMENT UNIT
UO Nº Corridor Location Length_km
7.832.340
OPE 1 Humajalso- Desaguadero Puno 207,000
OPE 2 Pte. Camiara-Tacna-La Concordia, Tacna-Tarata, Tacna-
Palca e Ilo-Tacna (La Costanera)
Tacna 400,000
OPE 3 Cañete-Lunahuana-Pacarán-Chupaca y Rehabilitación
del Tramo Zuñiga-Dv. Yauyos-Ronchas
Lima - Junin 281,730
OPE 4 Huancayo-Imperial-Izcuchaca-Ayacucho e Imperial-
Pampas-Mayocc
Junin- Huancvelica 421,490
OPE 5 Cajamarca-Celendin-Balsas-Dv. Chachapoyas-
Chachapoyas y Dv. Chachapoyas-Pedro Ruiz
Cajamarca - Amazonas 372,260
OPE 6 Santa -Yuracmarca-Sihuas- Huacracuco-Pte Comaru
tramo Yuracmarca-Sihuas -Huacrahuco- San Pedro de
Chonta
Ancash- huanuco 280,000
OPE 7 Lima - Canta- huayllay- Emp 3N y Chancay - Huaral -
Acos-Huayllay
Lima- Pasco 374,350
OPE 8 Ayacucho- Andahuaylas-Puente- Sahuinto Ayacucho- Apurimac 384,500
OPE 9 Huanuco- La Unión- huallanca- Dv. Antamina Huanuco- Ancash 172,000
OPE 10 Huaura- Sayan- Oyon- Ambo y -Rio Seco-Sayan Lima- Pasco- Huanuco 343,410
OPE 11 Juliaca - Huancane- Moho-Tilali- Frontera Bolivia-y dv.
Huancane-Putina-Sandia- San Ignacio
Puno 438,800
OPE 12 EMP 3S - La Quinua -San Francisco - Union Mantaro (Pto
Ene) - Punta de Carretera
Ayacucho 306,000
OPE 13 La Oroya-Chicrin- Huanuco- Tingo Maria-Emp 5N (DV.
Tocache)
Junin - Pasco - Huanuco -
Ucayali
367,000
OPE 14 Emp 3s Comas. Satipo-Mazamari-Puerto Ocopa-Atalaya
y Mazamari-San Martin de Pangoa-Punta de Carretera
Junin 472,800
OPE 15 Dv. Otuzco - Dv. Cayacuyan- Huamachuco-Cajabamba-
San Marcos-Cajamarca
La Libertad- Cajamarca 334,000
OPE 16 Emp. 1N Conochocha- Huaraz-Caraz-Molinopampa- y
Emp. 3N-Chiquian- Aquia- Emp 3N
Ancash 332,000
OPE 17 Carretera Pimentel -Emp PE 1N/ Chiclayo-Chongoyape-
Puente Cumbil- Emp PE 3N( cochabamba)-Chota-
Hualgayoc- y Emp 3N- Santa Cruz-Pte cumbil
Lambayeque - Cajamarca 394,000
OPE 18 Carretera Emp. PE-22B (Puente Raither)- Puente
Paucartambo-Villa Rica-Pto Bermudez- Von Humbolt y
Puente Paucartambo- Oxapampa
Junin- Pasco 365,000
OPE 19 Emp 3S (Izuchaca)-Huancavelica-Plazapata-
Castrovirreyna-Ticrapo-Pampano-Santa Ines-Pilpichaca y
Rumichaca
Huancavelica 290,000
OPE 20 Emp PE 18 A (DV. Tingo Maria) Aucayacu-Nuevo
Progreso Tocache- Juanui Picota- Tarapoto
San Martin Ucayali 458,000
OPE 21 Dv. Abancay- Chuquibambilla-Chalhuahuacho- Santo
Tomas -Yauri
Apurimac- Cusco 436,000
OPE 22 Chachapoyas- Molinopampa-Rodriguez de Mendoza-
Punta Carretera
Ancash 135,000
OPE 23 Dv. Cochabamba-Cutervo-Emp IIRSA Norte- Chamaya-
Jaen- San Ignacio-Puente la Balsa
Cajamarca - Amazonas 267,000
OFFICE OF SPECIAL PROJECTS – PERU - PROJECT
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CONSERVATION AND SERVICE LEVELS
These contracts in economic corridors look the
way roads are in permanent good standing for
the final user. Currently we have 33 contracts
for 11,371 km. (Peru Project and UGC).
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SERVICE LEVELS: indicators to qualify and quantify the
state of one-way service, which normally are used as the
permissible limits to which they can evolve their condition
of surface, functional, structural, and safety. Indicators
are specific to each track and change according to
technical and economic factors within a general scheme
of user satisfaction (comfort, opportunity, security and
economy) and profitability of the resources available.
Vial corridor: set of two or more continuous routes that conform to a specific purpose (glossary of terms of road infrastructure).
Economic corridor: economic space defined by trade flows between rural areas and intermediate cities of watersheds, sub watersheds and micro watersheds, with a own logic of articulation by the presence of markets, economic potential, connection roads, communications and population (Glossary of economic terms)
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CHALLENGES (1/2)
Maintaining the level of service to the 100% in good condition.Passing from the traditional concept of conservation to continuous development, considering the tendency of inclusion of the sustainable mobility instead of transport. Passing from the highways Conservation concept to the highways management concept. Implies contribution to the development of the competitiveness and impulse of the economic activity in full harmony with the inhabitants and the territory.Implementing intelligent transportation systems (ITS) and its interaction with the highways users.Inspecting the real-time national road network, through the use of the existing technologies, like the geomantic satellite. Real-time communication for emergency attentions.Road inventory qualified and valued, brought up to date permanently.
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Going toward the encounter of the large Economic Corridors with Pieces of Network. Implies to integrate the national highways system by logistic road corridors and its optimization.Improving the articulation of competences and responsibilities among the different government levels.Deepening the public-private associations: the special case of the mine and energy companies in Peru.Passing from transportation projects to interventions with territorial focus (packages of projects in predefines spaces). Prioritize the attention of the public property : practical solutions to the difficulty of identifying the collective preferences.Ensure resources for investment, operation and maintenance of public property.
CHALLENGES (2/2)
1. To maintain the national road network in good state.2. From infrastructure development to sustainable transport, from
maintenance contracts to road administration contracts.3. Incorporation of modern information gathering and processing
technologies for the entire network.4. Economic corridors will be the basic unit of planning and
intervention.5. Towards multi-annual budgets.6. Incorporation of post-contract services in studies contracts.7. Towards CREMA contracts.8. Road and bridge permanent inventories.9. Progressive introduction of ITS technologies.10. To deepen coordination arrangements among the national
goverment and regional and local goverments.
The Future
Jun.2008Jun.2009
ROAD CORRIDOR CAÑETE-LUNAHUANÁ-PACARÁN-CHUPACA-ZUÑIGA-DV. YAUYOS-RONCHAS
before after
HUANCAYO-IMPERIAL-IZCUCHACA-AYACUCHO-IMPERIAL-PAMPAS-MAYOC
Ene.2008
Feb.2009
Jul.2008 Oct.2008
BRIDGE CAMIARA-TACNA-LA CONCORDIA, TACNA-TARATA, TACNA-PALCA, ILO-TACNA
In process after
DV. HUMAJALSO - DESAGUADERO
Ene.2008 Mar.2008
before after
BEFORE construction and maintenance
Tarapoto – Juanjuí road, Tr.: Km 34+000 - Km 59+000
Work in progress
AFTER construction, rehabilitation and improvement
PERÚMinistry of
Transport and
CommunicationsViceministry of Transport Provias Nacional
¡THANK YOU!
www.proviasnac.gob.pe